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It was an anomaly where a bug reversed 8 hours of blocks. During that brief period, extra coins got minted but the network later rolled back those blocks once the issue was discovered, ensuring consensus was maintained

Ethereum went a different direction and ended up forking, with Ethereum Classic being the result.

True, Ethereum's fork after the DAO hack highlighted a major debate about immutability versus security. It underscores how different communities balance resilience and adaptability in blockchain governance

The classic people were on the side of immutability. They do not believe anything should be changed once it is in the blockchain.

What are some of the thoughts on this?

Immutability appeals to those valuing the permanence of blockchain records, while others stress that predefined protocols should allow corrective actions. Each approach reflects different risk management and governance philosophies

What are some of the common forms of risk management with investing? Give me a list.

Common forms include diversification, position sizing, stop-loss orders, hedging, dollar-cost averaging, setting risk/reward ratios, and regular portfolio reviews to adjust exposure based on market conditions